West Jacksonville development with 478 homes moves forward

City Council granted final approvals June 9 for the property near the Interstate 10/U.S. 301 interchange.`


On June 9, Jacksonville City Council voted to change the land use and zoning on 112.5 acres along Yellow Water Road about 1 mile north of Normandy Boulevard to allow for a 478-home residential development on the property.
On June 9, Jacksonville City Council voted to change the land use and zoning on 112.5 acres along Yellow Water Road about 1 mile north of Normandy Boulevard to allow for a 478-home residential development on the property.
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A 478-home residential development is moving forward in West Jacksonville after receiving City Council approval on June 9.

Council approved Ordinances 2026-0289 and 2026-0290, which change the land use and zoning on 112.5 acres along Yellow Water Road about 1 mile north of Normandy Boulevard. 

The vote on 2026-0289 was 15-0, with members Raul Arias, Rory Diamond, Chris Miller and Jimmy Peluso not present. The vote was 13-1 on 2026-0290, with member Tyrona Clark-Murray voting no and Arias, Diamond, Miller, Peluso and Council member Ron Salem away not present.

The property is southeast of the Interstate 10 and U.S. 301 interchange.

Ordinance 2026-0289 amends the land use to Low-Density Residential from Agriculture and Rural Residential. Under Ordinance 2026-0290, zoning changes to Planned Unit Development from Agriculture. A PUD allows uses, regulations and standards tailored to a property.

Jacksonville City Council voted June 9 in support of two separate developments on Yellow Water Road, denoted as Yellow Water North and Yellow Water South in a site plan and separated by several properties zoned for agricultural use. Plans call for a 478-home residential development on the property.
Jacksonville City Council voted June 9 in support of two separate developments on Yellow Water Road, denoted as Yellow Water North and Yellow Water South in a site plan and separated by several properties zoned for agricultural use. Plans call for a 478-home residential development on the property.

The PUD application allows for up to 550 homes in the development. Plans attached to the application show 478 homes.

The rezoning request would apply essentially to two separate developments on Yellow Water Road. Those developments, denoted as Yellow Water North and Yellow Water South in a site plan, would be separated by several properties zoned for agricultural use. Those properties have several owners. 

Jacksonville attorney Cyndy Trimmer, who represents the developer, said the owner of one of those properties is involved in the land use change but not the rezoning, and instead is considering development separate from the project involved in the rezoning request.

Trimmer is with the Driver, McAfee, Hawthorne & Diebenow firm.

The subdivisions for the residential development would include 282 40-by-100-foot lots, 112 40-by-110-foot lots and 84 50-by-110-foot lots.

The site plan also lists locations near Yellow Water South as potential future developments.

The PUD application would allow for fewer homes to be developed than a typical zoning. While Low Density Residential zoning allows for up to seven units per acre, the PUD application caps that number at five. 

The project developer is listed as Partridge Hill Capital LLC, managed by Andrew Hayman and Morgan McMasters, according to the Florida Division of Corporations.

The development has been in the works for four years, Trimmer said. Partridge Hill Capital worked with Council member Randy White, whose District 12 includes Yellow Water Road, to include “significant” green space along Yellow Water Road and to make the development consistent with a larger development planned across the street.

Developers of that project received approval for a PUD including 1,132 single-family residential units, 90 townhomes and commercial retail development on about 587 acres.

On May 21, Trimmer told the Jacksonville Planning Commission that a plan that included 30 acres appeared before the commission and Council previously, but that it received pushback from neighbors. The developer then bought more land to create a larger plan for the area instead of developing a smaller piece of property.

The proposed Yellow Water North and Yellow Water South development is near other planned or existing residential developments, according to the application. The Saddle Brook Landings community, with 195 townhouses on 31.11 acres, is about 2 miles south on Normandy Boulevard. 

 

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